710 likes | 1.04k Views
Surgical Care in Older Adults. Conditions which can be treated surgically are common in older adultsSurgery may be a good treatment option for some geriatric patientsMisconception that surgery is too dangerous for older adultsPatients and familiesProfessionals. Surgical Care in Older Adults. Car
E N D
1. Perioperative Care in Geriatrics Tomas L. Griebling, MD, FACS, FGSA
Department of Urology
The Landon Center on Aging
2. Surgical Care in Older Adults Conditions which can be treated surgically are common in older adults
Surgery may be a good treatment option for some geriatric patients
Misconception that surgery is too dangerous for older adults
Patients and families
Professionals
3. Surgical Care in Older Adults Careful perioperative evaluation and management can help reduce both morbidity and mortality
Increased attention and research related to surgical care in older adults
Cross-disciplinary principles
Interaction between surgical and non-surgical specialties is critical in this process
4. ACOVE Surgical Indicators Assessing Care of Vulnerable Elders
Quality indicators designed to examine delivery of care and help improve clinical outcomes
Measures regarding surgical care included in ACOVE-III
Evidence-based design
5. ACOVE Surgical Indicators Organized by timing of service
Preoperative
Perioperative
Postoperative
Spectrum of care is important
Consider and begin planning all aspects of care preoperatively
6. Preoperative Care Capacity to Consent
Discussion of Goals of Care
Pulmonary Evaluation
Cardiovascular Evaluation
Diabetes Evaluation
Delirium Risk Factor Assessment
7. Capacity to Consent IF a vulnerable elder is to have inpatient or outpatient elective surgery, THEN there should be documentation of the patient’s capacity to understand the risks and benefits of the proposed procedure before the operative consent form is presented for signature…..
8. Capacity to Consent ….. BECAUSE failure to document this information may result in a surgical procedure and surgical outcomes that are not consistent with the patient’s goals of care.
9. Capacity to Consent Informed consent
Critical to planning and delivery of quality surgical care
Important aspect of clinical communication
Potential target of liability
Ethical obligation
AMA Code of Ethics
Legislation – all 50 states mandate this
10. Capacity to Consent Risk factors that impair or prevent adequate informed consent
Older age
Fewer years of formal education
Delirium
Surrogate consent may be necessary
Cognitive assessment rare even in delirious subjects in prior studies (< 4% cases)
11. Capacity to Consent Independent risk factors for failure to obtain informed consent
Delirium (OR 2.7, 95% CI 1.3 – 5.3)
Less invasive procedure
(OR 5.0, 95% CI 2.0 – 12.8)
Not without risks
Need to match with goals of therapy
Potential for liability
12. Discussion of Goals of Care IF a vulnerable elder is to have elective major surgery, THEN patient priorities and preferences regarding treatment options, operative risks, anticipated postoperative functional outcome, and advance directive and designated surrogate decision maker should be discussed preoperatively…..
13. Discussion of Goals of Care ….. BECAUSE preoperative discussions regarding surgical options, including risks and outcomes, life-sustaining preferences, and presence of an advance directive, may improve the correlation between the patient’s wishes and administered care.
14. Discussion of Goals of Care Needed information
Complications
Likelihood for survival
Likelihood for functional decline
Providers often misunderstand patient preferences or don’t discuss
Poor documentation about goals complicates this issue
15. Discussion of Goals of Care Hospitalized Elderly Longitudinal Project
63% of patients > 80 years old received at least 1 life-sustaining intervention before death despite voicing a desire for less-aggressive care
Written advance directives
Only documented in about 25% cases
1990 Patient Self-Determination Act
16. Discussion of Goals of Care Patient’s prediction of functional status
Self-predictions and current level of function often provides the most accurate information about future outcomes
Factors influencing treatment choice
Burden of treatment
Possible outcomes
Likelihood of possible outcomes
17. Discussion of Goals of Care Low-burden treatments
Likelihood of poor outcome is strongly correlated with decision to decline even low-burden treatments among older adults
Discussions of goals important
Help maintain patient autonomy
Prevent unnecessary treatments
18. Preoperative Pulmonary Evaluation IF a vulnerable elder is to have elective major surgery, THEN a pulmonary review of systems (i.e., history of smoking, baseline exercise tolerance, history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), or asthma) and chest auscultation should be performed preoperatively…..
19. Preoperative Pulmonary Evaluation ….. BECAUSE vulnerable elders may possess risk factors for the development of postoperative pneumonia, and a pulmonary history and examination can aid in identifying the risk of postoperative pneumonia.
20. Preoperative Pulmonary Evaluation Prospective cohort > 160,000 elderly VA patients
Independent risk factors for post-op pneumonia
Increased age (> 60 years)
Recent smoking
History of COPD or stroke
Impaired cognitive or functional status
Weight loss
21. Preoperative Pulmonary Evaluation Many risk factors are non-modifiable
Interventions target post-operative risk reduction in high-risk patients
Incentive spirometry
Intermittent positive-pressure breathing
Minimum pre-operative assessment
Examination of airway, lungs, heart
Exercise tolerance testing if indicated
22. Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation IF a vulnerable elder is to have elective major surgery, THEN an assessment of cardiovascular risk should be performed preoperatively, BECAUSE cardiovascular disease causes a significant amount of postoperative morbidity and mortality.
23. Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation Risk stratification tools
Many different options available
Self-reported exercise tolerance is very important and a major predictor of outcome
Poor exercise tolerance (< 4 blocks walking or < 2 flights stairs) associated with more cardiac, neurologic complications and transfers to ICU or telemetry
24. Preoperative Cardiovascular Evaluation Formal cardiac stress testing used selectively based on risk stratification
Exercise tolerance
1 MET improvement = mortality reduction of 17% in men and 12% in women
Overall tolerance < 5 METs
2x increase in postoperative death in men
3x increase in postoperative death in women
25. Preoperative Diabetes Evaluation IF a vulnerable elder is to have elective major surgery, THEN the presence or absence of diabetes mellitus should be documented preoperatively; AND
IF a vulnerable elder with diabetes mellitus is to have elective major surgery, THEN the diabetes regimen and adequacy of diabetes control should be documented preoperatively…..
26. Preoperative Diabetes Evaluation ….. BECAUSE diabetes mellitus affects perioperative cardiovascular risk and is a major risk factor for wound infection.
27. Preoperative Diabetes Evaluation Hyperglycemia impairs wound healing
Blood sugar > 250 mg/dL
Impairs leukocyte function
Prevents immunoglobulin from fixing complement correctly
Increases risk of mortality
Associated with increased length of hospital stays
28. Preoperative Diabetes Evaluation Duration of diabetes
Long-standing diabetes (< 10 years)
Increases risk of end-organ disease
Increased risk of associated postoperative complications
Stroke
Myocardial infarction
Deterioration in renal function
29. Preoperative Diabetes Evaluation Mechanism of diabetes control
Important to know what patient uses
Influences choices on pre- and post-operative managements
Diet
Oral hypoglycemic agents
Insulin
Goal of serum glucose on day of surgery of
< 200 mg/dL
Consider delaying elective surgery if necessary until glucose control improved
Discussion continued in Post-operative care section
30. Preoperative Delirium Risk Factor Assessment IF a vulnerable elder is to have elective major surgery, THEN he or she should be screened for risk factors for the development of postoperative delirium within 8 weeks before surgery, BECAUSE delirium is common in elderly patients, and identification of patients at risk for delirium may allow prevention or earlier diagnosis and treatment of postoperative delirium.
31. Preoperative Delirium Risk Factor Assessment Post-operative delirium is common in older adults
Incidence varies widely in literature
However, associated morbidity and mortality can be significant
Studies suggest increased 2-3 fold increase in mortality in those with post-op delirium
Increases length of stay and need for post-discharge care
32. Preoperative Delirium Risk Factor Assessment Predictive models identify risk factors
Visual impairment
Severe illness
Cognitive impairment
Poor functional status
Self-reported alcohol abuse
Electrolyte abnormalities
BUN:creatinine ratio = 18
33. Preoperative Delirium Risk Factor Assessment Prior episodes of delirium are also highly predictive of future delirium
Prevention is key
Preoperative planning can help reduce the incidence of post-operative delirium
Discussion continued in Post-operative care section
34. Perioperative Care Prevention of Surgical Site Infection
Perioperative Beta-blockade
Anticoagulation for Hip Fracture and Replacement
35. Prevention of Surgical Site Infection IF a vulnerable elderly has elective major surgery, THEN prophylactic antibiotics should be administered within 1 hour before incision (2 hours for vancomycin or fluoroquinolone) and discontinued within 24 hours after the end of surgery…..
36. Prevention of Surgical Site Infection ….. BECAUSE studies show a marked reduction in the relative risk of surgical site infections with the appropriate timing and duration of antibiotic prophylaxis.
37. Prevention of Surgical Site Infection National Surgical Infection Prevention Project (NSIPP)
Prospective, randomized, double-blind RCT
Elective GI surgery
If no antibiotics = 4x increase in wound infection or systemic sepsis
Infection rates significantly reduced if antibiotics administered within 1 hour of start of surgical case
Multiple studies support this recommendation
38. Prevention of Surgical Site Infection Stopping antibiotics after surgery
Prolonged antibiotic use increases the risk of colonization or infection with antibiotic resistant organisms
NSIPP guidelines recommend routine antibiotics be stopped within 24 hours after surgery
Dependent on multiple patient factors
Tailored to the patient’s needs
39. Perioperative Beta-blockade IF a vulnerable elder with coronary artery disease has elective major surgery, THEN preoperative beta blockade should be considered, and if initiated, it should be continued until discharge, BECAUSE perioperative beta blockade appears to decrease the risk of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality.
40. Perioperative Beta-blockade Somewhat controversial
Several studies support this
More recent studies raise questions about safety and possible adverse outcomes
Depends on specific population and individual patient characteristics
Suggests therapy should be tailored by cardiovascular risk status
41. Perioperative Beta-blockade Underlying cardiovascular risk important
Retrospective study 780,000 patients in 326 hospitals
Outcomes varied by risk status
Low-risk = no benefit or possible harm
Adjusted OR death = 1.36 (95% CI = 1.27 – 1.45)
High-risk = survival benefit
Adjusted OR death = 0.58 – 0.88 (dependent on risk status)
42. Perioperative Beta-blockade Meta-analysis of 22 RCTs showed no reduction in total mortality, cardio-vascular mortality, nonfatal MI, nonfatal cardiac arrest (considered separately)
However, the composite risk of all of these events (combined) was reduced during the first 30 days post-op
43. Perioperative Beta-blockade Potential complications
Increased risk hypotension (RR = 1.27)
Increased risk of bradycardia (RR = 2.27)
Overall, the American College of Cardiology and American College of Physicians recommend beta-blockade in selected surgical patients (based on the cardiovascular risk status)
44. Anticoagulation for Hip Fracture and Replacement IF a vulnerable elder has sustained a hop fracture, THEN an anticoagulant regimen should be started; and
IF a vulnerable elder is to have a total hip replacement, THEN an anticoagulation regimen should be started preoperatively or on the evening after surgery…..
45. Anticoagulation for Hip Fracture and Replacement ….. BECAUSE studies suggest that DVT prophylaxis reduces the incidence of DVT and pulmonary embolism (PE) in elderly patients with hip fracture and undergoing total hip replacement.
46. Anticoagulation for Hip Fracture and Replacement Prevalence of DVT in elderly hip fracture patients undergoing arthroplasty ranges from 42 – 57% if no given anti-coagulation prophylaxis
Meta-analysis of RCTs showed that subcutaneous heparin administration yielded a 56% reduction in odds of proximal DVT
47. Anticoagulation for Hip Fracture and Replacement Comparison trials of various forms of anti-coagulation therapy have yielded mixed results
Low-molecular weight heparins
Warfarin
Other agents (enoxaparin, fondaparinux)
Standard heparin
Intermittent pneumatic compression leggings
Graduated compression stockings
48. Anticoagulation for Hip Fracture and Replacement If surgical delay occurs, recommend heparin-based therapy
Surgical delay is associated with decreased mobility, bedrest
Pain may also limit mobility and increase DVT risk
American Geriatrics Society (AGS) recommends all elderly patients undergoing major surgery
49. Anticoagulation Prophylaxis in Other Surgical Cases American Geriatrics Society (AGS) recommends all elderly patients undergoing major surgery receive some form of DVT prophylaxis
Graduated compression stockings
Intermittent pneumatic compression leggings
Must be operational prior to induction of anesthesia for maximum effect
Low-molecular weight heparins or regular heparin
Oral warfarin is NOT recommended (harder to control and adjust around time of surgery)
50. Postoperative Care Mobilization
Diabetes Control
Screen for Postoperative Delirium
Cognition and Function at Discharge
51. Mobilization If a vulnerable elder who was ambulatory as an outpatient has major surgery and is not in intensive care, THEN ambulation should be performed by postoperative day 2 …..
52. Mobilization ….. BECAUSE early ambulation as a major component of a multimodal intervention program, is associated with better functional recovery and shorter length of hospital stay in postoperative patients.
53. Mobilization Prolonged bedrest is associated with increased risk of DVT, pulmonary embolism, and deconditioning in elderly
Multiple studies support that early mobilization yield benefits
Decreased length of hospital stay
Faster attainment of functional recovery
ACC/AHA guidelines support this also
54. Mobilization Mobilization includes multiple components
Up to chair
Toilet transfers
Ambulation
Remove tethers (catheters, tubes, drains, etc.) as soon as feasible
Utilize physiotherapy and devices to aide mobility as needed
55. Diabetes Control If a vulnerable elder with diabetes mellitus has major surgery, THEN blood sugar should be dept below 200 on day of surgery and the first two post-operative days (or the chart should reflect attempts to achieve this)…..
56. Diabetes Control ….. BECAUSE diabetes mellitus affects perioperative cardiovascular risk and is a major risk factor for wound infection.
57. Diabetes Control Blood glucose > 250 mg/dL impairs wound healing after surgery
Intensive insulin therapy
Goal = blood glucose 80 – 110 mg/dL
Reduces morbidity and mortality in critically ill surgical patients
Compared to standard blood glucose range of 180 – 200 mg/dL)
58. Diabetes Control American College of Endocrinology
Position Statement on diabetes control in elderly hospitalized patients
Blood sugar targets
110 mg/dL = intensive care unit patients
110 mg/dL = preprandial, non-intensive care
180 mg/dL = random, non-intensive care
59. Screen for Postoperative Delirium If a vulnerable elder has major surgery, THEN a daily screening examination for delirium should be performed for the first 3 days after surgery, BECAUSE daily screening for delirium will improve recognition of delirium and allow earlier intervention.
60. Screen for Postoperative Delirium Daily screening with validated screening tools after surgery
Increases rates of early detection of post-operative delirium
Enhances ability to intervene
Leads to improved clinical outcomes and decreased morbidity / mortality
61. Screen for Postoperative Delirium Confusion Assessment Method (CAM)
Validated screening tool
Easy to administer
Acute onset and fluctuating course (required)
Inattention (required)
AND either
Disorganized thinking OR
Altered level of consciousness
Sensitivity 81%, Specificity 84%
62. Screen for Postoperative Delirium CAM is a useful screening tool
Confirmation of diagnosis using the DSM-IV criteria
Primary goal is to prevent onset
Treat potential causative factors
Consider psychiatric consultation in patients with persistent delirium not responsive to therapy
63. Screen for Postoperative Delirium Treatment
Improve environment
Involve family, other caregivers
Avoid restraints (physical & chemical) as possible (balance risk/benefit)
Correct underlying factors
Electrolytes and hydration
Inappropriate medications (doses, types)
64. Screen for Postoperative Delirium Treatment
Scheduled haloperiodol (0.5 – 2.0 mg)
Titrate to clinical response
May require total of 2.0 – 5.0 mg over time
Decrease dosing once improving
Remember to ‘start low and go slow’
Avoid PRN dosing – may worsen symptoms
65. Cognition and Function at Discharge If a vulnerable elder has major surgery, THEN assessment of cognition and functional status before discharge, in comparison with preoperative levels, should be performed, BECAUSE it may identify discharge-planning needs.
66. Cognition and Function at Discharge Approximately 60% of all older adults will loose complete independence of at least on Activity of Daily Living (ADL) during an acute hospitalization
May require additional care after discharge
Home health nursing
Rehabilitation / therapy services
Skilled nursing facility placement
Temporary vs. permanent
67. Cognition and Function at Discharge 97% of older adults report one or more additional care needs at the time of hospital discharge
33% report that at least one of these needs were not being met
Failure to screen for decline in cognitive or functional status
Need to understand baseline function
Understand available services
68. Cognition and Function at Discharge Baseline assessment must be performed and documented (changes in status)
Involve patient, family, other caregivers
Begin planning for discharge prior to admission or surgery if possible
Understand coverage and services available in your practice community
69. Summary Some elderly patients may be good candidates for surgical therapy
Careful perioperative care can help optimize outcomes
Preoperative assessment
Selection for surgery
Recommended preoperative evaluations
Perioperative care
Postoperative care
70. Summary Multidisciplinary cooperation is vital
Coordination of the overall plan of care
Transitions of care important
Between services
Changes in environment and care location
Successful outcomes can be achieved